WHEN WORLD (VISIONS) COLLIDE: THE CASE OF MAKAYLA SAULT AND INDIGENIZING THE CURRICULUM AT CANADIAN UNIVERSITIES

The case of Makayla Sault is, first and foremost, a tragic story of the death of a young First Nations girl from cancer. Beyond that, however, it raises important questions about substituted judgement with respect to medical decisions made on behalf of children below the age of consent. In particula...

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Main Author: Robert Scott Stewart
Format: Report
Language:unknown
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Online Access:https://iises.net/proceedings/37th-international-academic-conference-budapest/table-of-content/detail?cid=77&iid=018&rid=8472
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:sek:iacpro:7708472 2023-05-15T16:14:20+02:00 WHEN WORLD (VISIONS) COLLIDE: THE CASE OF MAKAYLA SAULT AND INDIGENIZING THE CURRICULUM AT CANADIAN UNIVERSITIES Robert Scott Stewart https://iises.net/proceedings/37th-international-academic-conference-budapest/table-of-content/detail?cid=77&iid=018&rid=8472 unknown https://iises.net/proceedings/37th-international-academic-conference-budapest/table-of-content/detail?cid=77&iid=018&rid=8472 preprint ftrepec 2020-12-04T13:35:17Z The case of Makayla Sault is, first and foremost, a tragic story of the death of a young First Nations girl from cancer. Beyond that, however, it raises important questions about substituted judgement with respect to medical decisions made on behalf of children below the age of consent. In particular, this case raises issues of who has the authority to make decisions regarding underage children when parents and health care workers radically disagree. Finally, the case raises issues of Canada?s First Nations people. The treatment of those peoples by settlers to this country has been, unfortunately, turbulent and, by any fair assessment, First Nations people have been treated ? and continue to be treated ? unjustly. This was officially recognized by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) report. That report also issued a number of recommendations to rectify the treatment of First Nations People of Canada. I will suggest that whatever one feels about the Makayla Sault case, it cannot be fairly and completely understood outside the context of the history of the mistreatment of First Nations People, the TRC report, and its recommendations. This paper explores this case with a view to one of those recommendations regarding ?indigenizing the academy? and how, in particular, non-aboriginal academics can approach and teach indigenous subject material in their classes. Philosophy, bioethics, substituted judgement, relational autonomy, communitarianism, First Nations People of Canada Report First Nations RePEc (Research Papers in Economics) Canada
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collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
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description The case of Makayla Sault is, first and foremost, a tragic story of the death of a young First Nations girl from cancer. Beyond that, however, it raises important questions about substituted judgement with respect to medical decisions made on behalf of children below the age of consent. In particular, this case raises issues of who has the authority to make decisions regarding underage children when parents and health care workers radically disagree. Finally, the case raises issues of Canada?s First Nations people. The treatment of those peoples by settlers to this country has been, unfortunately, turbulent and, by any fair assessment, First Nations people have been treated ? and continue to be treated ? unjustly. This was officially recognized by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) report. That report also issued a number of recommendations to rectify the treatment of First Nations People of Canada. I will suggest that whatever one feels about the Makayla Sault case, it cannot be fairly and completely understood outside the context of the history of the mistreatment of First Nations People, the TRC report, and its recommendations. This paper explores this case with a view to one of those recommendations regarding ?indigenizing the academy? and how, in particular, non-aboriginal academics can approach and teach indigenous subject material in their classes. Philosophy, bioethics, substituted judgement, relational autonomy, communitarianism, First Nations People of Canada
format Report
author Robert Scott Stewart
spellingShingle Robert Scott Stewart
WHEN WORLD (VISIONS) COLLIDE: THE CASE OF MAKAYLA SAULT AND INDIGENIZING THE CURRICULUM AT CANADIAN UNIVERSITIES
author_facet Robert Scott Stewart
author_sort Robert Scott Stewart
title WHEN WORLD (VISIONS) COLLIDE: THE CASE OF MAKAYLA SAULT AND INDIGENIZING THE CURRICULUM AT CANADIAN UNIVERSITIES
title_short WHEN WORLD (VISIONS) COLLIDE: THE CASE OF MAKAYLA SAULT AND INDIGENIZING THE CURRICULUM AT CANADIAN UNIVERSITIES
title_full WHEN WORLD (VISIONS) COLLIDE: THE CASE OF MAKAYLA SAULT AND INDIGENIZING THE CURRICULUM AT CANADIAN UNIVERSITIES
title_fullStr WHEN WORLD (VISIONS) COLLIDE: THE CASE OF MAKAYLA SAULT AND INDIGENIZING THE CURRICULUM AT CANADIAN UNIVERSITIES
title_full_unstemmed WHEN WORLD (VISIONS) COLLIDE: THE CASE OF MAKAYLA SAULT AND INDIGENIZING THE CURRICULUM AT CANADIAN UNIVERSITIES
title_sort when world (visions) collide: the case of makayla sault and indigenizing the curriculum at canadian universities
url https://iises.net/proceedings/37th-international-academic-conference-budapest/table-of-content/detail?cid=77&iid=018&rid=8472
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation https://iises.net/proceedings/37th-international-academic-conference-budapest/table-of-content/detail?cid=77&iid=018&rid=8472
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